st-make
is a CLI tool for creating and verifying problem packages
for sio2
with features such as:
- measuring time and memory in the same deterministic way as sio2,
- running the solutions in parallel,
- keeping a git-friendly report of solutions' scores,
- catching mistakes in the problem packages as early as possible,
- and more.
This tool is a fork of sinol-make, with features specific to Talent contests.
The purpose of the tool is to make it easier to create good problem packages
for Talent competitions, which requires collaboration with other people
and using a multitude of "good practices" recommendations.
While there are several excellent CLI tools for creating tests and solutions,
they lack some built-in mechanisms for verifying packages and finding mistakes
before uploading the package to the judge system.
As st-make was created specifically for the sio2 problem packages,
by default it downloads and uses sio2's deterministic mechanism of measuring
solutions' runtime, called oiejq
.
It's possible to directly install st-make through Python's package manager pip, which usually is installed alongside Python:
pip3 install st-make
pip
installs the st-make
executable in ~/.local/bin/
directory,
so make sure this directory is in your PATH
.
Here's how to add a directory to PATH
.
As oiejq
works only on Linux-based operating systems,
we do not recommend using operating systems such as Windows or macOS.
Nevertheless st-make
supports those operating systems,
though there are additional installation steps required to use
other tools for measuring time (which are non-deterministic and produce reports different from sio2):
- Debian-based systems (Ubuntu, usually Windows WSL):
apt install time
- Arch-based systems:
pacman -S time
- macOS:
brew install gnu-time coreutils
If you would like to have autocompletion for st-make
commands,
run the following command and refresh the shell (e.g. by opening a new terminal):
activate-global-python-argcomplete
The availabe commands (see st-make --help
) are:
st-make run
-- Runs selected solutions (by default all solutions) on selected tests (by default all tests) with a given number of CPUs. Measures the solutions' time with oiejq, unless specified otherwise. After running the solutions, it compares the solutions' scores with the ones saved in config.yml. If you're using oiejq, make sure you are not running on efficiency cpu cores. You can check if you have them like this. To run on normal cpu cores, usetaskset -c 8-15 st-make ...
, assuming that cpu cores 8-15 are not efficiency cores. Runst-make run --help
to see available flags.st-make gen
-- Generate input files using ingen program (for example prog/abcingen.cpp for abc task). Whenever the new input differs from the previous one, the model solution will be used to generate the new output file. You can also specify your ingen source file which will be used. Runst-make gen --help
to see available flags.st-make ingen
-- Generate input files using ingen program (for example prog/abcingen.cpp for abc task). You can also specify your ingen source file which will be used. Runst-make ingen --help
to see available flags.st-make outgen
-- Generate output files using the model solutions. Runst-make outgen --help
to see available flags.st-make inwer
-- Verifies whether input files are correct using your "inwer.cpp" program. You can specify what inwer program to use, what tests to check and how many CPUs to use. Runst-make inwer --help
to see available flags.st-make export
-- Creates archive ready to upload to Wyzwania, Talent-camp and other sio2 instances. Runst-make export --help
to see all available flags.st-make doc
-- Compiles all LaTeX files in doc/ directory to PDF. Runst-make doc --help
to see all available flags.st-make init [id]
-- Creates package from template on github and sets task id to provided[id]
. Requires an internet connection to run.
You can also run multiple commands at once, for example:
st-make gen prog/abcingen2.cpp inwer --cpus 4 run --tests abc1*.in doc export --no-statement
- Want to report a bug or request a feature? Open an issue:
- Want to help us build
st-make
? Create a Pull Request and we will gladly review it.